i do not kemne..
they have thick skin
By sweating when it is hot and shivering when it is cold.
Most likely because there is no hair to keep you warm. Your body will regulate its temperature
Hot
A Komodo Dragon does have scales. But they are cold-blooded animals so it is more the color of the skin/scales that regulate temperature.
it regulates our body temperature when whe sweat because we are hot.the sensory nerves in your skin send messages to your brain telling it when you are warm or cold. if you are warm, the brain tells your skin to sweat, cooling you off. if you are cold, it tells your muscles to contract and release (shivering) to heat you up.
Heat receptors are located in the skin, while cold receptors are also located in the skin but in different sensory nerve fibers. Heat receptors respond to higher temperatures, while cold receptors respond to lower temperatures, helping our body detect and regulate temperature changes.
The skin contains specialized nerve endings called thermoreceptors that detect temperature changes. These thermoreceptors send signals to the brain, which interprets the information as hot or cold. Additionally, the skin contains blood vessels that constrict or dilate to regulate heat loss or retention.
The skin helps regulate body temperature through a process called thermoregulation. When the body gets too hot, sweat glands in the skin produce sweat, which evaporates and cools the body. When the body gets too cold, blood vessels in the skin constrict to reduce heat loss and conserve warmth. This helps maintain a stable internal body temperature.
1. A white man jogs on a cold day. What colour would you expect his skin to be a. just before starting to run b. during the run c. 5 minutes after the run WHITE
A measure of how cool the human skin can become on a hot humid day is through the process of sweating and evaporation. When we sweat, moisture on our skin evaporates, taking away heat and cooling the skin. This helps regulate our body temperature.
yes